(Newser)
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Police are now confirming they were aware as early as late April that Elliot Rodger posted "disturbing" videos online, but didn't watch them, even after a visit to Rodger's apartment weeks before the Isla Vista shooting. Four deputies, a UC Santa Barbara police officer, and a dispatcher in training visited Rodger for a welfare check on April 30. How officials are explaining their actions, per a statement from the sheriff's office: They say Rodger was "shy, timid, and polite" during the 10-minute visit and was deemed "not an immediate threat to himself or others."

"Rodger told them he was having trouble fitting in socially in Isla Vista and the videos were merely a way of expressing himself," the statement reads. "They did not have cause to place him on an involuntary mental health hold, or to enter and search his residence. Therefore, they did not view the videos or conduct a weapons check." This admission corrects a statement issued Sunday that said "the sheriff's office was not aware of any videos until after the shooting rampage," the AP notes. In his manifesto, Rodger wrote that he deleted the majority of the videos—which the Los Angeles Times reports weren't as sinister as the one he uploaded before the shooting—from YouTube after the check, but he re-posted at least some of them in the week leading up to the killings.

just anotherr case of the police dropping the ball . in fact i dont hink im going to even call them police anymore ill call em keystoners , now if the kid had been homeless they would have taken care of him long ago , hows that maximum iq to be a keystoner working out for you merika ? dont call the keystoners call a lawyer , ritch spoiled kid couldnt get laid with a fistfull of hundreds . takes it out on society , only problem was he took his best shot last ,

MilitaryVet

May 30, 2014 4:19 PM CDT

They want to ruin our second amendment rights, but don't bring this clown in for an analysis? We ARE in a police state.